Dir. by Phil
Alden Robinson
Starring
Robert Redford, Sidney Poitier, Dan Aykroyd, David Strathairn and Mary
McDonnell
Plot:
In the late
60s, two college students are caught using early computer modems to hack into
bank accounts. One is sent to prison,
while the other flees to Canada. Twenty
years later, that man, under the assumed name of Martin Bishop, is running a
security firm in San Francisco, specializing in performing staged break-ins to
test companies’ security procedures. His
group is approached by the NSA, who use his criminal background to blackmail
him into stealing a device that can break any encryption code.
Nostalgia:
It took
forever for my parents to get me to watch this.
They must have rented it from the video store three or four times, and
for whatever reason (I don’t remember any more), I was never interested in
watching it. Once I did, however, it
quickly shot up my list of favorite movies of all time. It’s still among my top twenty or so
most-watched movies.
Rewatch:
Okay, I’m
trying something new here. I can’t even
pretend that this is a nostalgic movie that I’m watching for the first time in
forever. This one is one of my favorite
movies, and I’ve watched it over and over.
So it’s not one that I can really evaluate honestly as to whether it
holds up or not. For me, the answer is
undeniably yes (especially when compared to other computer-based movies of the
era).
However, what
I can do is talk about why I think the movie holds up. For me, it’s down to two big things: the cast
and the screenplay. This is pretty much
an early 90s dream-team of a cast, and is one that you’d never be able to
assemble today, not for the budget this movie had anyway. It’s got Robert Redford, Dan Aykroyd, David
Strathairn, Sidney Poitier, River Phoenix and Mary McDonnell as the main team,
with Ben Kingsley, James Earl Jones, Timothy Busfield and (much to my surprise
when I found out), a very young Donal Logue in his first film role as
supporting players. Not to mention
Stephen Tobolowsky, in one of my favorite performances of his ever. Special mention has to go to David Strathairn
as Whistler, the blind phone phreaker on the team (probably based off of
real-life blind phone phreaker Josef “Joybubbles” Engressia), who is introduced
reading a braille Playboy, and is instrumental to almost all of my favorite
scenes.
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Yes, that's Donal Logue from Gotham |
I have a
Bachelor’s degree in computer science, and while I haven’t used it much (I’m a
librarian now) I still know my way around computers for the most part. In most movies that Hollywood puts out about
“hacking”, especially ones from the 80s and 90s, it’s painfully obvious that
they’ve been written by someone with absolutely no idea how a computer actually
works. Just try watching
Hackers some time with someone who has a knowledge of coding
and IT. The script for
Sneakers, on the other hand, is one of the few movies from
that time period to actually treat computer hacking seriously, and to do a
little research first. This movie’s
version of hacking is, rightly, just as much social engineering as it is actual
code-breaking. They bluff security
guards into thinking they’re the fire station responding to an alarm, set up a
programmer on a fake date to record him saying his password, and use
distraction cons and sleight of hand to break into an office building. When they do obtain the device that they were
hired to steal, there is no big red “hack it” button or anything. They have to manually check the chip one
sector at a time to find out what’s on it, and use trial and error to figure
out how to use it.
Three
sequences in particular stand out to me.
First, the aforementioned experimenting with the “little black box”,
which is intercut with the other half of the team using Scrabble tiles to
unscramble the name of the project that produced the box (it turns out to be an
anagram for “Too Many Secrets”). Second,
a chase sequence done entirely through audio, as Bishop reconstructs the route
he took while tied up in the trunk of a car by describing the sounds of the
highway to Whistler. And finally, the
climax of the film, in which Whistler is the only member of the team available to
drive the getaway car, and has to be talked through how to operate the vehicle
and negotiate a parking lot. I could
probably pick half a dozen more, but I’ll stop there.
![]() |
I’ll just leave this here without further comment |
I love caper
movies, and this is one of my all-time favorites. Anyone here who hasn’t seen it definitely
needs to check it out, especially if you were a fan of [original re-watch host Mark Does Stuff]’s
Leverage coverage.
Nostalgia: A
Rewatch: A
Stray
Thoughts
-Whoever
cast this movie deserves a bonus for the opening sequence alone. Set twenty years before the rest of the
movie, it features two different actors as the young Redford and Kingsley. They look so much like their counterparts
that I initially thought they were them in some sort of
“young age” makeup.
-My favorite
stage musical has long been Sweeney Todd, and my favorite version
has always been the early 80s TV special version starring George Hearn. Sneakers is also one of my
favorite movies. So why then did I
never, ever put together that George Hearn played the Russian spy until just
now?
-“Hello, my
name is Werner Brandes. My voice is my
passport, verify…me?”
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